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Keys CV 2017 Barbara (Ara) Keys School of Historical and Philosophical Studies University of Melbourne VIC 3010 Australia Phone: +61-3-8344-5100 ORCID ID: 0000-0002-8026-4932 E-mail: [email protected] Personal website: http://www.barbarakeys.com Education Ph.D. in History, Harvard University, 2001 Fields: International History since 1815; United States since 1789; Modern Russia; Medieval Russia (Akira Iriye, Ernest May, Terry Martin) A.M. in History, Harvard University, 1996 M.A. in History, University of Washington, 1992 B.A. in History, summa cum laude, Carleton College (Northfield, MN), 1987 Positions University of Melbourne Associate Professor, History, 2015-present Senior Lecturer, History, 2009-2014 Lecturer, History, 2006-2009 California State University, Sacramento Assistant Professor, History Department, 2003-5 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Research Scholar, Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, 2003 Other Leibniz Institut für Europaïsche Geschichte, Mainz Senior Research Fellow, Spring 2017 Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin Visiting Scholar, Center for the History of Emotions, Spring 2016 Harvard University Visiting Scholar, Center for European Studies, Fall 2012 University of California, Berkeley Visiting Scholar, Center for the Study of Law and Society, Spring 2009 Publications Books Reclaiming American Virtue: The Human Rights Revolution of the 1970s, Harvard University Press, 2014. Hardcover and Kindle eBook. Reviewed in New York Review of Books, Weekly Standard, Times Higher Education, American Historical Review, Journal of American History, Reviews in History, Reviews in American History, Diplomatic History, Canadian Journal of History, Fides et Historia, Utblick de Mänskliga Rättigheternas Historia (Sweden), Weekendavisen (Denmark), Ricerche di Storia Politica (Italy), Neue Politische Literatur (Germany), Sehepunkte (Germany), H-1960s, H-Diplo Winner, Woodward Medal in Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Melbourne (2015) Barbara Keys, Curriculum Vitae 2 Globalizing Sport: National Rivalry and International Community in the 1930s, Harvard University Press, 2006. Paperback edition, 2013. Prizes for Globalizing Sport: • Myrna Bernath Prize, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 2008 (for best book by a woman in the preceding two years in U.S. foreign relations, transnational history, international history, peace studies, cultural interchange, and defense or strategic studies) • Akira Iriye International History Book Award (co-winner), Foundation for Pacific Quest, 2006-7 • Book Award, North American Society for Sport History, 2006 • Best Book Prize, Australian Society for Sport History, 2006 • Best Book Prize, International Society for Olympic Historians, 2006 • Jean Monnet Publication Prize, Contemporary Europe Research Centre, University of Melbourne, 2007 Edited Book The Morality of Global Sport: From Peace to Human Rights. Under contract with University of Pennsylvania Press, expected publication 2018. Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles “Political Protection: The International Olympic Committee’s UN Diplomacy in the 1980s,” under review. “Building Solidarity: How the Telephone Shaped U.S. Central America Activism in the 1980s,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, forthcoming. “Harnessing Human Rights to the Olympic Games: Human Rights Watch and the 1993 ‘Stop-Beijing’ Campaign,” The Journal of Contemporary History, in press 2017. DOI: 10.1177/0022009416667791. “Die Spinne im Netz: Ideenpolitik im Kalten Krieg [The Politics of Ideas in the Cold War],” Zeitschrift für Ideengeschichte 11, no. 4 (Winter 2017): 19-29. “The Post-Traumatic Decade: New Histories of the 1970s,” coauthor with Jack Davies and Elliott Bannan. Australasian Journal of American Studies 33, no. 1 (July 2014): 1-17. “Birth of a New Era: Teaching the 1970s,” Australasian Journal of American Studies 33, no. 1 (July 2014): 98-109. “Senses and Emotions in the History of Sport,” Journal of Sport History 40, no. 1 (Spring 2013): 401-17. Reprinted in Sports History, vol. 1, edited by Wray Vramplew and Mark Dyreson (New York: Sage, 2016). “Henry Kissinger: The Emotional Statesman,” Diplomatic History 35, no. 4 (September 2011): 587-609. Barbara Keys, Curriculum Vitae 3 “Congress, Kissinger, and the Origins of Human Rights Diplomacy,” Diplomatic History 34, no. 4 (November 2010): 823-51. “The Body as a Political Space: Comparing Physical Education under Nazism and Stalinism,” German History 27 (2009): 395-413. “An African-American Worker in Stalin’s Soviet Union: Race and the Soviet Experiment in International Perspective,” The Historian 71, no. 1 (Spring 2009): 31-54. “Spreading Peace, Democracy, and Coca-Cola: Sport and American Cultural Expansion in the 1930s,” Diplomatic History 28, no. 2 (April 2004): 165-96. “Soviet Sport and Transnational Mass Culture in the 1930s,” The Journal of Contemporary History 38, no. 3 (July 2003): 413-34. Reprinted in Sports History, vol. 2, edited by Wray Vramplew and Mark Dyreson (New York: Sage, 2016). Book Chapters “Human Rights,” in Cambridge History of America in the World, Vol. 4: 1945 to the Present, edited by Max Paul Friedman, David Engerman, and Melani McAlister (New York: Cambridge University Press), commissioned. “The End of the Vietnam War and the Rise of Human Rights,” in Human Rights, Empires, and Their Ends: The New History of Human Rights and Decolonization, edited by Roland Burke, Marco Duranti, and A. Dirk Moses, submitted. “Protecting against Financial Crises,” coauthor with Til Schuermann, in Fourteen Points for the 21st Century, edited by Jeffrey Engel and Richard Immerman (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press), under review. “Sport Diplomacy,” coauthor with Xu Guoqi, in The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Foreign Relations, edited by Robert David Johnson (New York: Oxford University Press), accepted. “Nonstate Actors,” in Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations, 3d ed., edited by Frank Costigliola and Michael Hogan (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 119-34. “'Something to Boast About': Western Enthusiasm for Carter's Human Rights Diplomacy,” in Reasserting America in the 1970s: U.S. Public Diplomacy and the Rebuilding of America's Image Abroad, edited by Hallvard Hottaker, Giles Scott-Smith, and David Snyder (Manchester: University of Manchester Press, 2016), 229-244. “Emotions in Intercultural Relations,” in Asia Pacific in the Age of Globalization, edited by Robert David Johnson (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 212-220. “Human Rights,” coauthor with Roland Burke, in The Oxford Handbook of the Cold War, edited by Richard H. Immerman and Petra Goedde (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013), 486-502. Barbara Keys, Curriculum Vitae 4 “Anti-Torture Politics: Amnesty International, the Greek Junta, and the Origins of the U.S. Human Rights Boom,” in The Human Rights Revolution: An International History, edited by Akira Iriye, Petra Goedde and William I. Hitchcock (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 201-22. “The Early Cold War Olympics: Political, Economic, and Human Rights Dimensions, 1952-1960,” in The Palgrave Handbook of Olympic Studies, edited by Helen Jefferson Lenskyj and Stephen Wagg (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 72-87. “The 1960 Rome Summer Olympics: Birth of a New World?” in Myths and Milestones in the History of Sport, edited by Stephen Wagg (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), 287-303. “International Relations,” in Routledge Companion to Sports History, edited by S. W. Pope and John Nauright (New York: Routledge, 2010), 248-267. “The International Olympic Committee and Global Culture during the Cold War,” in Les relations culturelles internationales au XXe siècle: De la diplomatie culturelle à l'acculturation, edited Anne Dulphy, Robert Frank, Marie-Anne Matard-Bonucci, and Pascal Ory (Brussels: Peter Lang, 2010), 291-298. “The Soviet Union, Cultural Exchange, and the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games,” in Sport zwischen Ost und West. Beiträge zur Sportgeschichte im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, edited by Arié Malz, Stefan Rohdewald, and Stefan Wiederkehr (Osnabrück: Fibre, 2007), 131-146. ISBN 3-938400-15-3. “The 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games and the Postwar International Order,” in 1956: European and Global Perspectives, edited by Carole Fink, Frank Hadler, and Tomasz Schramm (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2006), 293-307. ISBN 3-937-20956-5. “The Internationalization of Sport, 1890-1939,” in The Cultural Turn: Essays in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations, edited by Frank A. Ninkovich and Liping Bu (Chicago: Imprint Publications, 2001), 201-220. ISBN 1879176378. Edited Journal Issue Special issue on America in the 1970s, Australasian Journal of American Studies 33, July 2014. Review Essay “The Kissinger Wars,” in The American Historian 10 (November 2016): 16-22; reprinted in “Process: A Blog for American History,” at www.processhistory.org/the-kissinger-wars/. Book Reviews Review of Trust, but Verify: The Politics of Uncertainty and the Transformation of the Cold War Order, 1969-1991, eds. Martin Klimke, Reinhild Kreis, and Christian E. Ostermann (Washington: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2016), in Journal of American History, forthcoming. Barbara Keys, Curriculum Vitae 5 Review of A Tremendous Thing: Friendship from The Iliad to the Internet by Gregory Jusdanis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014), in Canadian Journal of History, forthcoming. “The Newest Idealism: Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy,” review of Human Rights in American Foreign Policy: From the 1960s to
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